\name{stan_rdump}
\alias{stan_rdump}
%- Also NEED an '\alias' for EACH other topic documented here.
\title{
Dump the data for a Stan model to \R dump file
in the limited format that Stan can read.
%%  ~~function to do ... ~~
}


\description{
  This function takes a vector of names of \R objects and outputs
  text representations of the objects to a file or connection.
  The file created by \code{stan_rdump} is typically used as data 
  input of the Stan package (\url{http://mc-stan.org/}) or 
  \code{\link{source}}d into another \R session. The usage of 
  this function is very similar to \code{dump} in \R. 
}

\usage{
stan_rdump(list, file = "", append = FALSE, 
          envir = parent.frame(),
          width = options("width")$width, 
          quiet = FALSE)
}

\arguments{
  \item{list}{A vector of character string: the names of one or more \R objects
    to be dumped. See the note below.}

  \item{file}{Either a character string naming a file or a
    \link{connection}.  \code{""} indicates output to the console.}

  \item{append}{Logical: if \code{TRUE} and \code{file} is a character string,
    output will be appended to \code{file}; otherwise, it will overwrite
    the contents of \code{file}.}

  \item{envir}{The environment to search for objects.}
  \item{width}{The width for maximum characters on a line.  
    The output is broken into lines with \code{width.}}
  \item{quiet}{Whether to suppress warning messages that would appear when 
    a variable is not found or not supported for dumping (not being numeric
    or it would not be converted to numeric) or a variable name is not allowed
    in Stan.} 
}

\value{
  An invisible character vector containing the names of the objects
  that were dumped.
}
\note{
  \code{stan_rdump} only dumps numeric data, which first can be 
  a scalar, vector, matrix, or (multidimensional) array.  Additional types
  supported are \code{logical} (\code{TRUE} and \code{FALSE}), \code{factor},
  \code{data.frame} and a specially structured \code{list}.  

  The conversion for logical variables is to map \code{TRUE} to 1
  and \code{FALSE} to 0.  For \code{factor} variable, function 
  \code{as.integer} is used to do the conversion (If we want to transform a
  factor \code{f} to approximately its original numeric values, see the help of
  function \code{factor} and do the transformation before calling
  \code{stan_rdump}). 
  In the case of \code{data.frame}, function 
  \code{data.matrix} is applied to the data frame before
  dumping. See the notes in \link{stan} for the specially
  structured \code{list}, which will be converted to 
  \code{array} before dumping. 

  \code{stan_rdump} will check whether the names of objects
  are legal variable names in Stan. If an illegal name is 
  found, data will be dumped with a warning. However, passing the 
  name checking does not necessarily mean that the name is 
  legal. More details regarding rules of variable names in Stan can
  be found in Stan's manual. 
  
  If objects with specified names are not found, a warning will
  be issued. 
}

\references{
  The Stan Development Team 
  \emph{Stan Modeling Language User's Guide and Reference Manual}. 
  \url{http://mc-stan.org}. 
}

\seealso{
  \code{\link{dump}} 
}
\examples{
# set variables in global environment
a <- 17.5
b <- c(1,2,3)
# write variables a and b to file ab.data.R in working directory
stan_rdump(c('a','b'), "ab.data.R")

x <- 1; y <- 1:10; z <- array(1:10, dim = c(2,5)) 
stan_rdump(ls(pattern = '^[xyz]'), "xyz.Rdump")
cat(paste(readLines("xyz.Rdump"), collapse = '\n'), '\n')
unlink("xyz.Rdump")
}
\keyword{rstan} 
